Yesterday, a case I was using showed an interesting result. the 2 loads fired from it were 2395 fps and 2396 fps. Thes shots landed within 1/4" of each other. I immediately thought of that old rule of reloading.....sort you cases by weight. I've never really though that much about it. Yeah, different weight will mean a different volume, and that will equal a different pressure, blah, blah, blah. Just never thought it could make much difference in a hunting rifle. Most of my brass comes to me already loaded....I bought a factory box, and I don't mix that box up with other stuff, I reload that box untill it used up, then get another.
I bought this 30-30 Remington ammo about 10 years ago. It is their plain jane GREEN BOX 150 grain CoreLoct. Yesterday was the first day I was beginning to get pretty serious about my loading for the 30-30 and this event popped up. I culled it out of the group, and am going to reload it several more times to see what I get.
All this leads to......My scale is that nearly useless Lee scale that will only weigh up to 110 grains. (I've said nasty stuff about Richard under my breath several times...........) so how does one determine the volumetric differences between cases without a scale? I can envision the use of water, but it may be more relevant to fill the case level to the neck with powder, and weigh that charge. (That idea just came to me, see it does help to ramble endlessly with you guys) any other ideas?
So I'm off to do some case studies. Guess I'm even gonna try deburring the flash hole while I'm at it.